Word conjugator

What is common between amo, amas, amat, amamus .... and gachchati, gachchataha, gachchanti?

Other than occupations of a person with plenty... of free time? :)


Well these are all word conjugations. First one is in Latin and second is in Sanskrit.

That way, our poor English is much better. Because in this language, the verbs do not differ so much for different persons and singular-plural etc. But many other languages have different forms for first person, second person, third person and singular and plural.

By the way, we never learnt by rote hoguttene-hogutteve, hoguttiya etc. in Kannada. And we never found it very difficult either. OK, mother tongue.

I am babbling. See, all these conjugations of verbs are available in a single website (not mine) called verbix.

Verbix sanskrit conjugator - make sure you type verbs in devanagari.

Verbix Hindi conjugator 
  See the example of jaana here
https://verbix.com/webverbix/go.php?T1=%E0%A4%9C%E0%A4%BE%E0%A4%A8%E0%A4%BE&Submit=Go&D1=47&H1=147

 Just now I realized, Hindi and other Indian languages differ for genders also.

Verbix Latin conjugator   : See here conjugation of audio

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